Home1797 Edition

CLAVARIA

Volume 5 · 259 words · 1797 Edition

club-top: A genus belonging to the cryptogamia class of plants, and of the order of fungi; the 58th in the natural method. The fungus is smooth and oblong. The hemotades, or oak leather club-top, exactly resembles tanned leather, except that it is thinner and softer. It is of no determinate form. It grows in the clefts and hollows of old oaks, and sometimes on ash in Ireland and in some places of England, &c. In Ireland it is used to dress ulcers, and in Virginia to spread platters upon, instead of leather. The militaris, and one or two other species, are remarkable for growing only on the head of a dead insect in the nympha state.

A modern writer on natural history (Mr Miller), has asserted the whole genus of clavaria to belong to the tribe of woophytes, that is, to the animal, and not to the vegetable kingdom. According to his method, he ranks them among the Vermes, under a subdivision which which he terms *Fungula aculis atomiferis*; thereby understanding them to be compound animals with many orifices on their surface, from which are protruded atoms or animalcules which have a visible spontaneous motion, something similar to what is now acknowledged to be a fact with regard to a numerous class of marine bodies termed *corallines*. This motion, however, has not been observed by other naturalists. Scheffer has figured the seeds of several clavariae as they appeared to him through the microscope; and none of these fungi, when burnt, emit the strong disagreeable smell peculiar to animal substances.